Schliekelman Paul
Department of Statistics, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602-1952, USA.
Evolution. 2007 Jun;61(6):1277-88. doi: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.2007.00122.x.
Discoveries of mutations conferring resistance to infectious diseases have led to increased interest in the evolutionary dynamics of disease resistance. Several recent papers have estimated the historical strength of selection for mutations conferring disease resistance. These studies are based on simple population genetic models that do not take account of factors such as spatial and family structure. Such factors may have a substantial impact on the strength of natural selection through inclusive fitness effects. That is, people have a strong tendency to live with relatives and therefore have a high probability of transmitting infectious diseases to them. Thus, an allele that protects an individual against disease infection also protects that individual's family members. Because some of these family members are likely to also be carrying the allele, selection for that allele is magnified by family structure. In this paper, I use mathematical modeling techniques to explore the impact of such kin selection on the strength of selection for infectious disease resistance alleles. I show that if the resistance allele has the same proportional effect on both within- and between-family transmission, then the impact of kin selection is relatively minor. Selection coefficients are increased by 5-35%, with a greater benefit for weaker alleles. The reason is that an individual with a strong resistance allele does not need much protection from infection by family members and thus does not benefit much from their alleles. The effect of kin selection can be dramatic, however, if the resistance allele has a larger effect on between-family transmission than within-family transmission (which can occur if between-family infection rates are much smaller than within-family rates), increasing selection coefficients by as much as two- to threefold. These results show conditions when it is important to consider family structure in estimates of the strength of selection for infectious disease resistance alleles.
对传染病具有抗性的突变的发现引发了人们对疾病抗性进化动态的更多关注。最近的几篇论文估计了赋予疾病抗性的突变的历史选择强度。这些研究基于简单的群体遗传模型,没有考虑空间和家族结构等因素。这些因素可能通过广义适合度效应,对自然选择的强度产生重大影响。也就是说,人们有与亲属共同生活的强烈倾向,因此很有可能将传染病传播给他们。这样一来,一个保护个体免受疾病感染的等位基因也会保护该个体的家庭成员。由于这些家庭成员中的一些可能也携带该等位基因,家族结构会放大对该等位基因的选择作用。在本文中,我使用数学建模技术来探讨这种亲缘选择对传染病抗性等位基因选择强度的影响。我发现,如果抗性等位基因对家庭内部和家庭之间传播的比例效应相同,那么亲缘选择的影响相对较小。选择系数会增加5% - 35%,对较弱的等位基因益处更大。原因是具有强抗性等位基因的个体不需要家庭成员太多的感染保护,因此从他们的等位基因中获益不多。然而,如果抗性等位基因对家庭间传播的影响大于对家庭内传播的影响(如果家庭间感染率远低于家庭内感染率,就可能出现这种情况),亲缘选择的效果可能会很显著,使选择系数增加多达两到三倍。这些结果表明,在估计传染病抗性等位基因的选择强度时,考虑家族结构何时很重要。